Tag: Pasta

Pasta Salad with Feta and Snow Peas

Pasta salad

Pasta salad

One of my resolutions this summer is to have more picnics. This shouldn’t be too hard, seeing as we have a lovely park a few blocks from our house. So a couple weeks ago, we had our first picnic! I texted a bunch of friends and asked everyone to bring some food and we all met at the park.

Jonah and I brought this miniature amp we have and hooked my phone up and played some music, we had chips, strawberries, veggies and ranch dip, and this delicious pasta salad that Jonah made. It was perfectly filling and refreshing. Great for a summer day! And it was a big hit.  We found the recipe on Martha Stewart’s website. We adapted a little bit (because I’m not a huge fan of bell peppers, which is beginning to change), so here’s our version.

Pasta Salad with Feta and Snow Peas

Ingredients

Coarse salt and ground pepper
1 pound fusilli
4 oz snow peas, strings removed, cut in half
2 scallions, thinly sliced
1/2 cup chopped fresh cilantro
1 cup (4 ounces) crumbled feta cheese (we did a bit more)
2 Tbl olive oil
2 Tbl rice vinegar
1 1/2 tsp balsamic vinegar
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper

Instructions

Cook your pasta according to the package. During the last minute of cooking, add in the snow peas so they’ll be a little cooked. Drain the pasta and peas and rinse with cold water to cool and stop from cooking. In a large bowl, combine the pasta and peas with scallions, cilantro, feta, oil, vinegars, salt, and pepper. Toss to combine, and serve chilled or at room temperature.

Mom’s Mac and Cheese

Mom's Mac and Cheese
Mom's Mac and Cheese

Mom's Mac and Cheese

Jonah here. Mom, I hope you’re reading this.  Everyone else – let me give you a little background.  This was one of my favorite foods as a kid, not the Kraft Mac and Cheese, but the kind my mom would make from this simple recipe. When I was growing up, we usually had it with broccoli, or a salad.

I asked my mom for this recipe when I went off to college, so she wrote it on an index card and I made it many times throughout my 4 years of school. That index card was magneted to my fridge and now lives in Annie’s recipe box in our kitchen. It’s really easy to make, but really delicious. Thanks Mom, for a childhood of yummy dinners!

Susan’s Mac and Cheese

Ingredients

1 lb. pasta – I use penne
2 Tb. butter
Half of a white or yellow onion, diced
2 Tb. all-purpose flour
1/2 t garlic powder, or more to taste
1/2 t salt
1 cup milk
1 cup grated cheddar cheese, packed in

Instructions

Fill a large pot with water, salt it, and bring it to a boil. Add penne and cook till it’s done; drain.

Meanwhile, melt the butter in a pan. Add the chopped onions and cook until browned and soft.

Add the flour, mix until smooth, then sprinkle in garlic powder and salt (if you don’t have garlic powder, feel free to mince up some garlic and add it with the onion at the beginning). Add milk and let it heat up, then add the cheese and mix in until fully melted.

Return the drained pasta to the pot. Pour in cheese sauce and mix in thoroughly. Serve!

Gnocchi with Spicy Tomato Sauce

Gnocchi
Gnocchi
Gnocchi
Gnocchi
Gnocchi
Gnocchi
Gnocchi

I’ve been lusting after the pasta attachments for my KitchenAid. Dreaming of them, of all the beautiful pasta I would make if I had them. Oh man. I want them so badly. But I don’t have them. And I probably won’t for a while. But I want to make pasta, so I after eyeing a few gnocchi recipes, I thought, hell, I’ll try it.

This may not have been my best decision ever. I mean, you have to start somewhere, right? But I decided to do it when we had a friend coming for dinner. But she was supportive of my endeavors. After reading many recipes and such about how to handle your potatoes and how much flour and egg to add, onward I went. One important thing is you don’t want to put your potatoes in a food processor or use an immersion blender or anything like that. You want to put it through a ricer or a grater or mash it with a fork. I chose the last route.

These gnocchi were pretty good for a first try. As I mentioned before, I think they were a little over-cooked. They also were a little dense, and I’m not sure why. There are a few possible explanations: 1) boiling them instead of roasting them? 2) added to much flour? 3) added too much egg? Who knows, but all of these are variables I plan on futzing with the next time around.

Potato Gnocchi and Spicy Tomato Sauce

Ingredients

Potato Gnocchi

2 lbs russet potatoes
1 tsp salt
1 egg, slightly beaten
1 1/2 cups flour, plus some for rolling/dusting

Spicy Tomato Sauce

1 tsp butter
2-3 large shallots
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
1 tsp salt
1 28-oz can whole tomatoes, drained
1 15-oz can tomato puree/sauce
a pinch (or two) of sugar

Instructions

Potato Gnocchi

Cut your potatoes in half and put them in a pot of water. Bring the pot to a boil and cook until the potatoes are tender throughout. This will take about 40-50 minutes. When the potatoes are cooked, remove each half one at a time onto a cutting board and peel each piece before you move onto the next. Be careful as they’ll be very hot! But the skins come off pretty easy, and if not, just use a paring knife. Once all the potatoes are removed and peeled, mash them. I used a fork so that I could be more thorough and make sure there weren’t any big clumps. Anyway, mash the potatoes and spread them out on the cutting board so that they can cool.

Once cool, put the potatoes in a bowl, add the egg and salt and mix together. Now add the flour a little bit at a time (I probably did 1/4 cup at a time) and mix it in. You don’t have to add all the flour. In fact, it’s probably better if you don’t (I don’t know this for a fact) because I assume the gnocchi will be less dense when cooked. Just add flour until the dough doesn’t stick to your hands anymore. Now dump the dough onto a lightly floured surface (read: counter) and knead it gently for a few minutes, incorporating more flour if necessary.

After kneading, divide the dough into 6 equal parts, and roll each chunk one at a time into a rope about 3/4 inch thick. Cut each rope into 1 inch pieces. You’ll want to be sure to do this on a floured surface, as the rolling and cutting especially can result in the dough stick to the counter, which makes it hard to…ya know…remove them.

While you’re rolling out your dough, you can bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. When it’s boiling, add the gnocchi in batches. I made the mistake of putting all of mine in at once and I think this caused the ones that were put in at the beginning. So do it in batches. After a little bit, your gnocchi will rise to the top of the pot. Let them cook for another minute after they do that, and then remove them with a slotted spoon to a bowl or colander or whatever. Do the same with the rest of the gnocchi.

I also decided to cook them in a pan after boiling them for 2 reasons: 1) they were pretty mushy and I wanted to dry them out a bit, and I knew this would help. 2) I love gnocchi that has that little bit of crunch from being lightly seared in a pan of butter. Yum. So if you want to do that, melt a bit of butter in a pan and cook the gnocchi in batches until it’s lightly browned on each side.

Spicy Tomato Sauce

Be warned, this pasta sauce has quite a bite to it from the chili flakes. I thought it was a perfect amount of spiciness, but if you are nervous about it, add less than 1/2 a tsp and add more till it suits your tastebuds.

Melt the butter in a saucepan. Add the shallots, pepper flakes, and salt. Cook until the shallots are translucent and beginning to brown. At this point, add the wine and let it cook down. Now add the whole tomatoes and tomato puree, breaking the whole tomatoes up with a wooden spoon as they cook. Taste the sauce, and if it’s a little too spicy, add some sugar (a little bit at a time) and perhaps some wine. Allow the sauce to cook down until it’s the right consistency and put it atop your favorite pasta (or perhaps the gnocchi you just made).

Pasta with Fresh Pesto

Pasta with Fresh Pesto
Pasta with Fresh Pesto

Pasta with Fresh Pesto

So last week I was in tech and then the run of a show. I had to make really quick dinners because by the time I got done nannying or doing whatever I was doing, I usually had only an hour to cook and eat before heading out to the theater. I pulled out the Alice Waters cookbook and looked for something incredibly quick and delicious. I came across a recipe for fresh pesto (which takes like no time at all to make), and immediately got very excited. Many years ago, a friend of mine named Sierra studied abroad in Italy. When she returned she came over to our house and made us fresh pesto, and man, there is nothing like pasta with fresh pesto. So, with that delicious meal in mind, I set out on my own pesto expedition.

Pasta with Fresh Pesto

Ingredients

1 lb dry pasta
1 garlic clove
salt
1/4 cup lightly toasted pine nuts
1/4 cup (or more) freshly grated parmesan cheese
1 cup lightly packed basil
1/2 cup olive oil

Instructions

First, you’ll want to boil a big old pot of water that has been abundantly salted. While that’s boiling, you can get started on the pesto. Now the cookbook said to use a mortar and pestle but a) who has those anymore and b) why use those when you have a food processor? If you don’t have a food processor, then I suggest you return to the mortar/pestle technique.

In your food processor, combine garlic and salt, pulse. Then add the pine nuts, pulse again until finely minced. Now add in the cheese, pulse again. Ready for the green? Coursely chop your basil, and add it to the food processor, and… you guessed it… pulse! Now add your olive oil and pulse again.

While you’ve been doing all this pesto stuff, hopefully you’ve not forgotten about cooking your pasta. The recipe in the book said to reserve 1 cup of pasta water and add it along with the pesto, but I did not do this… Mostly because I didn’t read the recipe (STUPID ANNIE. You should always ALWAYS read through a recipe completely before you make it). I think I just figured pasta + pesto = delicious, what else could you possibly need to do? Anyway, it all still worked out just fine. As I was saying, cook your pasta, strain it (reserving pasta water if you’d like), and put it back in the pot with the pesto. Mix it up and serve with a light dusting of parmesan cheese.